Thursday, October 27, 2016

This post was written by SCHS member Mary Ann Ruscitto. It is a continuation of the Schenectady Sluggers series which focuses on boxers in Schenectady. Here is Part 1 and Part 2.

As you may know or maybe you don’t know I live in my Grandfather Gaetano Ruscitto's house. This house has been in our family about 110 years! Living in this house and in the East Front St. neighborhood for the better part of my life I have heard the stories. I have heard the stories about the ALCO and all the foot traffic that was seen when the whistle blew signaling that the work day was done. I also heard the stories about how there used to be many taverns in the East Front Street area and how the guys from the ALCO would stop for a drink after work. I heard about the “bookie joint” on Jefferson St. and was told never to go into that building when I was a kid. I remember the trains coming down to Front St. and into Sheldon's hay grain and feed store and how there was a turn-about in the back of their property near the John St. Side. I can still hear my Mom saying to me “Don’t talk to the trainmen!!” But, they were so nice and they used to give us kids big pieces of chalk!

Oh such great memories. What prompted this story is the request from Mike Maloney the Librarian/Archivist from the Schenectady County Historical Society (the hidden gem of Schenectady) I kept mentioning to him that there was an outdoor boxing ring on the eastside of Front St. has he ever seen any information on it. As I started thinking about the rumors of this outdoor ring I started remembering the stories I used to hear my Dad and his friends talk about and never really paid attention to until lately. My father and his friends talk about boxing. I can still remember them all gathering at our house, I believe it was on a Friday night, to watch the boxing matches on this little TV screen. They would have such a great time. Did you know that the first fight that was ever televised was aired here in Schenectady New York in the studios of WRGB! As the Saratogian Reported on October 10, 1942; three Saratoga fighters win on first televised boxing card in history. They were Henry Johnson, Jimmy Beach, and Ben Dowen. Joseph “Pep” Cassillo arranged the bouts under the sponsorship of AAU and WRGB. “Pep” as he was known in and around boxing was the person who was instrumental in starting the outdoor boxing ring in the East Front St. neighborhood.

The pictures are from the personal scrap book of “Peps” wife Mary Casillo

As I grew older I realized that boxing had an even bigger presence in our neighborhood and in my life. My best friend Daniel Barone’s dad was a boxer! They lived right next door to us on Front St. I would hear the adults telling stories about boxing but really never paid attention. Because in 1947 when Tony Barone was boxing Danny and I were just mere infants! As I asked the questions to prepare for this story I found out that “Pep” was Tony’s trainer until he decided to go pro.

Rocky Graziano

As The Kingston Daily Freemen, Kingston NY, Tuesday Evening May 13, 1947 edition reported with
a headline that “ROCKY GRAZIANO TO ATTEND LOCAL BOXING CARD” The newspaper goes on to say that “indications that there will be a capacity crowd at the Tony Barone-Eddie Morton match here Thursday night and among the fans at the ringside in the municipal auditorium will be ROCKY GRAZIANO. The contender for the middleweight championship of the world told a Freemen sports writer that he will attend the local fistic show to take a peek at Tony Barone. It seems that the Schenectady Welterweight’s ability to reach the finals in the national AAU tournament at Boston has been acting as a magnet in drawing the attention of men in the professional field.

The KINGSTON DAILY FREEMEN goes on to report that on Friday Evening May 16, 1947 Rocky Graziano shows up for the Barone-Mortan fracas. He sat quietly through the pre-lims but left during the semi-finals. Had he remained he would have witnessed a contest that for sheer intensity, ferocity and cold-blooded dramatics was without parallel in amateur boxing. Barone chopped the deciding bout in the three with Morton by a split decision. The paper states that when the final records of classic boxing brawls is written you will find the match between Tony Barone and Eddie Morton close to the top of the list.

Mary, Pep, and Angie

Now this leads me to another person in my life that I have heard stories about and just never paid much attention to. You know that old saying is “if I could just sit down with these people one more time and hear the stories.” Anyway, my Godparents Alfred and Angelina (Maiello) Villano had family that they were very close to. Their names were Joseph “PEP” and Mary (Maiello) Cassillo. I would hear the conversations about boxing but never paid attention.

Mary Cassillo, “Peps” wife and my Godmother Angie were Sisters some people said they looked like twins. They were two short little munchkins that were very attractive and adored their husbands. Pep was a man of strong build and I remember him to be very quiet and attentive to his wife and children. They had four children, Marilyn (Cassillo) Cardinal, and Paul, Donna, and Joe Cassillo.

This article is from the private collection of Mary Cassillo “Pep Cassillo's

wife it was not noted who wrote this.

Joseph “Pep” Cassillo’s life started in the East Front St. Neighborhood at 320 Front St. His mother lived on Madison St. and “Pep” with his wife Mary when they first got married lived on Front St. Their daughter Marilyn was born on Front St. and as his family grew he moved to Avenue A in Schenectady, NY and then on to Maple Ave. in Glenville NY.

Marilyn Cassillo Cardinal and Joe Cassillo at the Erie Blvd Arena

The way Paul Cassillo (“Peps” youngest son) tells the story to me is that the house at 320 Front St. was a two family house his Uncle and Aunt Andy and Mary Cassillo lived up and his Father and Mother lived downstairs and the property behind this house extended to Erie Blvd. This property is in the area next to the old Coyne Laundry which is now a vacant piece of property. This is where the Erie Boulevard Arena was located. There used to be a bath house at 1311 Erie Blvd that the boxers would use to prepare for their fights. Then they would go from the bath house to the boxing ring.

Articles from Mary Cassillo's Scrapbook.

This outdoor boxing ring would draw large crowds as the Union Star reported; "Johnny Linsey stepped into the ring against Freddy Bala of Amsterdam and stopped the rugged Army private in 36 seconds of the last round in the five-round feature of the Bucci A.C.’s weekly amateur boxing show before the biggest crowd of the year at the packed Erie Boulevard Arena."

Another headline states “a capacity crowd is expected to turn out for the Bucci A.C.’s all star benefit amateur boxing show for Joe Nagorka at the Erie Boulevard arena. The entire proceeds of the card will be given to Nagorka, former popular amateur and pro boxer here who is now recovering from a serious illness. Headliner for this five-rounder was between Schenectady’s Johnny Mazzonable and Allen Huriburt of Westmoreland and Jim Dooley Beats Lem Thomas."

Pep's son Paul told me that they used to sell bags of peanuts for 10 cents and soda for 10 cents. Oh where do I stop so many stories with so many boxers and so much that Joseph “Pep” Cassillo contributed to in boxing and to the City of Schenectady. I can go on and on with pages and pages of info. But, I think I need to close this story. The Erie Blvd. Boxing Ring was closed in 1947 after the owner Mary Cassillo decided to use land for other purposes. Pep Cassillo along with the many positions he held also became the commissioner of boxing. “Pep” and his wife Mary started Ring 26. His wife Mary would work right along side of her husband. I remember Mary sitting at her kitchen table with piles of paper all around her preparing for the next boxing match.

In 1969 the Veterans Boxing Association Ring No. 26 elected Pep to be their President. One of the stories I found was from The Knickerbocker News which reported on Feb. 26, 1968:

“200 Attend Servo Fete, More than 200 people attended
a benefit dinner for Marty Servo last night in Schenectady. The event was
sponsored by Ring 26 of the Veterans' Boxing Association and held at the Sons
of Italy Hall.Servo, the Schenectadian
who won the w o r l d welterweight crown, is seriously ill in Colorado.The money will be used to help defray medical
expenses.Phillip Schuyler High
principal, Ben Becker, a leading boxing figure, was the main speaker. Ring 26
president Joseph “Pep” Cassillo was program chairman.”

Joseph “Pep” Cassillo was a good man who was passionate about boxing, his City of Schenectady and people in general. He helped many young people thru his boxing experiences and the coaching program that he started at the WMCA. He also was one of the coaches of the 1982 US Olympic boxing team.

For me personally I remember as the years came upon all of them “Pep” his wife Mary and my Godmother Angie (Mary Cassillo’s Sister) they would like to go and play bingo at the Sons of Italy that was located on Liberty Street at the time. First it would be Me, Mary and Angie and then as “Pep” became more frail he would join his wife and all of us to play bingo. I remember that the Alzheimer’s was setting in and he would need help with finding the numbers on his bingo card. So I would sit next to him and help him out. I remember when he would see me walk in he would put a big smile on his face and say “here comes my bingo buddy” come sit by me. Good memories of all them and I consider myself blessed to have had them in my life and “Pep” as my friend.

Friday, October 21, 2016

The week of October 9-15, 2016 was
Fire Prevention Week, an annual public education campaign since 1927,
commemorating the Great Chicago Fire of October 8-9, 1871, one of the deadliest
blazes in US history. Like most other
cities and towns, Schenectady has had its share of fires. Perhaps the most well-known is the 1690 blaze
set by the French and Hurons during the Schenectady Massacre, which consumed the frontier village. The other major conflagration is the fire of
1819, which wiped out the business district on the Binnekill, destroyed many
early Dutch buildings, and left 200 families without homes. In 1861, the city was to experience the
second significant fire of the nineteenth century.

Broomcorn growing along the banks of the Mohawk with the Burr Bridge in the backgroundCourtesy of the Grems-Doolittle Library Photo Collection.

In the mid-1800s, Schenectady was
growing. Broom making was a major industry
in Schenectady County, with Schenectady, Scotia and Glenville responsible for
1,000,000 brooms per year. These brooms were produced from broomcorn, a type of
sorghum. The low-lying land and islands of the Mohawk River were fertile
grounds for growing this crop. Otis
Smith was one of the first to grow broomcorn in the county. He owned 125 acres, and a factory that by
mid-century turned out 192,000 brooms and 180,000 whisk brooms(Cheetham, Peg. “Broom Trade Once Swept
Schenectady into Spotlight.” Schenectady
Union-Star, 22 Apr. 1955.) Unfortunately, on an August afternoon in 1861
that factory, located on the northwest corner of Washington Avenue and Cucumber
Alley, was the source of a conflagration that eventually destroyed it.

How the fire started is not entirely
clear. A contemporaneous newspaper
report describes how a worker at the broom factory may have been at fault: “He
had been pitching the roof with a pail of tar.
In some way, perhaps in lighting his pipe, the pitch burst into a blaze
and spread and ran down to a heap of dried broom stalks as inflammable as
guncotton.” (“The Great Fire in August,
1861.” Schenectady Gazette, 20 Dec.
1911.). Claims by some that this
occurred on the north end of the building were contradicted by others’
assertions that the fire started at the southwest corner of the building. In any event, the First Dutch Reformed Church
bell would have rung out the alarm, along with other church bells and
locomotive whistles.

Once it began, the fire, assisted by
a strong wind from the northwest, quickly spread from Otis Smith’s factory at
the foot of Cucumber Alley to the corners of Church and Washington, and the
western end of Front Street. It spread
along the western side of Washington to the Mohawk River in the north and extended
south, and reached houses on the eastern corners of Front and Washington. In an effort to beat back the fire, residents
on the western side of Ferry Street were soaking their wooden roofs with pails
of water.

Photo of an early "engine" in Crescent Park. Courtesyof the Grems-Doolittle Library Photo Collection.

Firefighting in the mid-nineteenth
century was very different from that endeavor today. After the fire of 1819, the city purchased a
piece of equipment called a forcing pump, which has been described by Larry
Hart in Volume 1 of Tales of Old
Schenectady as “…a tub on wheels (though called an
engine) which was fitted with a fixed nozzle and dragged to the scene of a fire like a
feeble cannon.”
Hauling this cart over cobblestone streets could not have been an easy
task for the volunteer firefighters; horses were not used until 1896 because
part-time volunteer companies could not look after the animals. Fighting the fire was a bit awkward, as the
firefighters had to position the cart correctly in order to aim the hand-pumped
stream of water at the flames. The cart
was filled with water from cisterns, located at key points in the city, and
refilled as necessary. By the 1830s, the
city turned to suction pumpers, which replaced the need for bucket brigades in
drawing water from the cisterns. One
model was the “Button” hand pumper, pulled by a large crew of men, who also had
the exhausting job of operating the pump handles. Individual residents still used leather pails
to quench fires in their homes.

One can imagine the pandemonium let
loose by this catastrophic event. In
1861 the firefighting service had a limited capacity to check the spread of
fires. Residents were very concerned,
some even panicked, about the ultimate safety of their homes and possessions. Many were dousing their houses with water.
Some were conveying their property into the streets. Adding to the chaotic scene was the cacophony
of sound, made up of the shouting of firefighters and residents, the clacking
of fire engine wheels and the licking of the flames devouring wood. Completing the picture was the chilling sight
of buildings ablaze, with the billowing clouds of smoke looming above. Sadly, thieves took advantage of the disorder
to ply their trade.

Painting of the 1861 fire that consumed the Dutch Reformed Church. Courtesy of the Schenectady History Museum.

In the path of destruction stood the
Old Dutch Reformed Church. This brick building,
which had a cupola and bell tower encasing a two-ton bell, was constructed in
1814. Among its treasured contents were
a very large brass chandelier and an organ.
While people were occupied with the danger to their own homes and
businesses, the edifice caught fire.
Unfortunately, the engines were located near the river, which put them
too far away from the church to save it.
However, people did their best to salvage whatever they could on the
inside, including the pulpit, books, carpets, and a chandelier; the organ was
not saved. Ironically, in 1861 the
church’s 3,200 pound bell had been in use for only 13 years. It replaced the famously sonorous 1732 bell,
which cracked in 1848 and was melted down into miniature bells for the
congregants. A local reporter
dramatically described the destruction of the steeple and the bell on that
afternoon in August of 1861:

“With steady rapidity the work of destruction circled the steeple, till it tottered and fell with a tremendous crash, and spread over the roof till it thundered down. The bell, weighing 3,200 lbs., was eaten away from its supports, and fell, crashing through floors, partitions, and masonry, making more noise in its last moments than it ever made in its life, killed, like a faithful sentinel, by the very enemy whose approach it had heralded.”

In an interesting side note, the
pastor was reputedly far from distressed by the collapse of the building. On
the contrary, the destruction “…was viewed with unconcealed joy by the pastor,
who had been struggling and fighting for a new church for years.” (“The Great Fire in August, 1861.” Schenectady Gazette, 20 Dec. 1911, p. 12.).

Although the five volunteer fire
companies were making heroic efforts to stem the tide of the flames, it became
clear that they needed aid from other locales. In the absence of the mayor, the
city’s recorder telegraphed Albany, Troy and Amsterdam for help. All responded, arriving as the fire was
dwindling. Extraordinarily powerful at
the time was Troy’s steam pumper, the Hugh Rankin. Although situated in Governor’s Lane north of
Front Street, it pumped water all the way to Washington Avenue through 15,000
feet of hose. It was reported that the powerful stream destroyed the walls of
the building it was targeting. In spite
of these efforts, the wind-swept fire did spread to areas farther away. Embers landed on rooftops as far afield as
the area around the junction of State Street and Nott Terrace/Veeder
Avenue. A building on Nott Terrace was
set ablaze, as well as one at 117 South Center Street, near the corner of
Franklin Street.

Members of the Protection Hose Company No. 1. located on State Street near South Ferry. Courtesy of the Grems-Doolittle Library Photo Collection.

The cost of the fire was $120,000,
which is equivalent to over $3,000,000 today.
Although no one died, there was substantial property damage. The Smith
factory and warehouse were destroyed, along with ancillary buildings,
equipment, and products. The Old Dutch Church was destroyed. Severe damage was done to the western portion
of Washington Avenue, particularly heading north to the river; only one
building remained standing between the Otis broom shop and the Scotia Bridge at
the end of Washington Avenue. Additional
damage was done to two houses on Washington Avenue south of Front Street. The eastern corners of Front Street and
Washington Avenue were also involved in the blaze, as was Church Street. Destruction was limited by the concerted efforts
of residents, who doused buildings with water and, in some cases, knocked down
blazing structures to halt the spread of the flames.

Photo showing Cucumber Alley and the Whitmyre Broom Factory.The Dutch Reformed Church can also be seen in the background.Courtesy of the Grems-Doolittle Library Photo Collection.

The fire brought changes. The Otis property was purchased by Charles L.
Whitmyre, who later built the Whitmyre and Co. Broom Factory on the site. A new stone church was built in 1862, positioned
farther away from the front of the street.
Sadly, it was the victim of the fire of February 1, 1948 and was once
again rebuilt. The fire department
replaced hand pumpers with three steam pumpers between 1864 and 1869. These too were replaced in 1872, as the
introduction of fire hydrants, as part of a municipal water system, made them
obsolete. Toward the end of the century, hand-drawn hose carts gave way to
horse power.

The broom factory at Cucumber and Washington would see anotherblaze in the 1870s. After it became the WhitmyreBroom Factory.Courtesy of the Grems-Doolittle Library Photo Collection.

The First/Dutch Reformed Church would also see anotherdestructive fire in 1948. Courtesy of the Grems-Doolittle Library Photo Collection.

The 1861 fire was certainly not the
last in the city. With the continual evolution of firefighting techniques and
more sophisticated equipment, we will never again witness a conflagration like
those of earlier times.

For more information on the fires of
1819 and 1861, see Robert A. Petito Jr.'s excellent article “The Fires of Schenectady,” in the May-June 2011 issue of Schenectady County Historical Society
Newsletter.